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Native American Cultures in North America

Native American Cultures in North America. SS4H1 and SS4G2. Georgia Performance Standard. SS4H1 The student will describe how early Native American cultures developed in North America.

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Native American Cultures in North America

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  1. Native American Cultures in North America SS4H1 and SS4G2

  2. Georgia Performance Standard SS4H1 The student will describe how early Native American cultures developed in North America. • Locate where Native Americans settled with emphasis on the Arctic (Inuit), Northwest (Kwakiutl), Plateau (Nez Perce), Southwest (Hopi), Plains (Pawnee), and Southeast (Seminole). • Describe how Native Americans used their environment to obtain food, clothing, and shelter.

  3. Georgia Performance Standard SS4G2 The student will describe how physical systems affect human systems. • Explain why each of the Native American groups (SS4H1a) occupied the areas they did, with emphasis on why some developed permanent villages and others did not.

  4. Notes: • In this unit, students will study six different tribal regions. These regions are similar to our regions today. Arctic Plateau Northwest Southwest Plains Southeast • Students will study one tribe from each of the six main regional areas.

  5. Notes: • Each tribal region had different tribes living within that region, just like each region today has many states and cities. • Unlike our regions today, most of these tribes had different languages and traditions.

  6. Tribes of the Indian Nation http://www.emersonkent.com/map_archive/native_american_tribes_map.htm

  7. Essential Questions By the end of the unit, students should be able to answer these questions thoroughly. • Where were the following tribes located: Inuit, Kwakiutl, Nez Perce, Hopi, Pawnee, and Seminole? • How did Native Americans use their environment to obtain food, clothing, and shelter? • Why did each tribe choose their location to live?

  8. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit

  9. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Background Information • Inuit means “humans” or “people” • Inuits still live in the Arctic region region today • Commonly referred to as Eskimos • Due to limited contact with rest of the world, they believed they were the only people in the whole world until 1818 when they met some European explorers.

  10. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Background Information • They usually live in small bands (not tribes) of immediate family, larger bands included grandparents and aunts and uncles. • Children quickly learned survival skills: • Boys followed fathers and learned to hunt, take care of dogs, build houses, make tools • Girls learned to sew, cook, and preserve foods

  11. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Food • Most food is gathered in summer when the sun was out longer. In the winter, Inuits don’t see the sun from November-February. • Hunt whales, caribou, birds • Pick berries (during summer) • Catch fish

  12. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Clothing • The Inuit are able to endure their brutal environment because they dress properly. • Wear skins of animals (seal, caribou, whale). • The caribou: used to make a coat called a parka (large, warm, had hoods to protect the wearer’s head and face) • Wolf fur: lined the hoods (it doesn’t freeze when it gets wet)

  13. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Clothing • Shoes, called mukluks, are watertight boots that reach almost to the knees. The soles of the mukluk are made from sealskin that has been chewed to make it soft and flexible. • Clothing is decorated with strips of colored fur, animal tails, feathers, beads or pieces of ivory.

  14. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Clothing • Goggles- The Inuit make special goggles to protect their eyes from the glare of the sun on ice and snow. • The goggles have narrow slits to let only a small amount of light through to the eyes.

  15. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Shelter • Inuits are nomadic. • In summer, they would live in tents made of animal skin • In winter, some Inuits would live in earth houses made of earth, rocks, and driftwood. Others would build igloos. • Igloos could be as large as 10 feet high and 15 feet across. Some would hold multiple families. A small temporary igloo only takes a couple of hours to build.

  16. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit Shelter • Igloos or snow houses could be built near each other with connecting tunnels. • They entered through long tunnels with a skin hanging at the opening. • Families slept in the main room together, on a platform made of snow and piled with furs for warmth. • Several smaller rooms attached to store supplies/food • A burning wick made of twisted moss provided enough heat

  17. Native American Culture Arctic Tribes: Inuit

  18. SS4G2 Why did they occupy the areas they did?INUIT The Arctic is over 4,000 miles of ice and snow. There are no trees, but there are many rivers and bays. Very few people live there. However with the rivers and bays, there was ample food during summer months. Due to lack of communication, the Inuits did not know that there was anything else in this world until 1818. They did not have any knowledge of other scenery. Therefore, this is how they existed.

  19. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl

  20. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl Background Information • Kwakiutl means “beach on the north side of the water”. • Pronounced kwah-kee-OOT-l • Famous for gigantic carvings made on the trunks of cedar trees, generally called totem poles

  21. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl Background Information • Located on the Pacific Northwest- near modern day Oregon, Washington, and California

  22. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl Food • The Kwakiutl Indians were fishing people. Kwakiutl men caught fish and sea mammals from their canoes. • They also hunted deer, birds, and small game. • Kwakiutl women gathered clams and shellfish, seaweed, berries, and roots.

  23. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl Clothing • Kwakiutl men didn't usually wear clothing at all, though some men wore a breech cloth. • Women wore short skirts made of cedar bark. In colder weather, both genders wore knee-length tunics, long cloaks of shredded cedar bark, and moccasins. • For formal occasions, Kwakiutl people wore more elaborate outfits, with tunics, leggings and cloaks painted with tribal designs.

  24. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl Clothing • Both men and women wore basketry hats made of woven spruce root. The designs and patterns of these hats often displayed a person's status and family connections. • The Kwakiutls did not usually paint their faces, but they did paint their hair red for festive occasions, and sometimes wore tribal tattoo art. • Kwakiutl women wore their hair long and loose or in two long braids, while men often coiled theirs into a topknot.

  25. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl Shelter • The Kwakiutls lived in coastal villages of rectangular cedar-plank houses with bark roofs. • Usually these houses were large (up to 100 feet long) and each one housed several families from the same clan (as many as 50 people.)

  26. Native American Culture Northwest Tribes: Kwakiutl Shelter • Only coastal tribes, who made their living by fishing, made plank houses.

  27. SS4G2 Why did they occupy the areas they did? KWAKIUTL . They lived along the Pacific coast in California and in the northwestern part of what is now the United States, including the Alaskan coast, and the western Canadian coastline. The climate was rainy and mild. The land was covered with forests and lakes so wildlife and food were abundant. Like the Inuit the Kwakiutl did no farming, but unlike the Inuit they had lots of food available. The area they inhabited was very rich in natural resources the Indians could use to survive.

  28. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce

  29. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Background Information • Nez Perce is French, pronounced Nay per-say, which means “pierced nose” (which is misleading because most of the people did not pierce their nose). • However, the Native Americans called themselves Nimipu, pronounced Nee-me-poo, which means “the real people”. • Tribal location: Idaho, Oregon and Washington State. They hunted buffalo in Montana and Wyoming. • A large number of Nez Perce still live in Idaho.

  30. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Background Information • The Nez Perce were encountered by Lewis & Clark on their journey west. Lewis journaled about the encounter. http://lewisandclarkjournals.unl.edu/read/?_xmlsrc=introduction.v07.xml&_xslsrc=LCstyles.xsl • Detailed information for students and teachers: http://www.bigorrin.org/nez_kids.htm • National Park information: http://www.nps.gov/nepe/index.htm

  31. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Food • The Nez Perce practiced a seasonal subsistence cycle, living with the seasons, not by the month.  • In early spring, the women traveled to the lower valleys to dig root crops.  The men traveled to the Snake and Columbia rivers to intercept the early salmon runs.  The men still hunted, but much less during the salmon runs. • In mid-summer all the people of the village moved to higher mountainous areas setting up temporary camps to gather later root crops, fish the streams, and do more hunting of the big game. 

  32. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Food • By late fall the people settled back into their traditional villages along the rivers.  Salmon and other fish, game, dried roots and berries provided winter foods for storage.  • Hunting parties would travel to the hills and river bottoms where the deer and elk wintered. • The basic roots gathered for winter storage included bitterroot, wild carrot, wild potato, and other root crops.  Fruit collected included service berries, gooseberries, hawthorn berries, thorn berries, huckleberries, currants, elderberries, chokecherries, blackberries, raspberries, and wild strawberries. 

  33. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Food • Other food gathered includes pine nuts, sunflower seeds, and black moss. • Large game animals that were hunted include deer, elk, moose, bear (black, brown, and grizzly), mountain sheep and goats.  • Small game was hunted when needed, include rabbit, squirrel, badgers, and marmot.  Birds  such as ducks, geese, ruffed grouse, and sage hens were also hunted.

  34. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Clothing • Women wore long deerskin dresses. • Men wore breech cloths with leather leggings and buckskin shirts. • A lady's dress or warrior's shirt was fringed and often decorated with beadwork, shells, and painted designs. • Moccasins were worn on their feet.

  35. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Clothing • Nez Perce people adapted European costume such as cloth dresses and vests, which they also decorated with beading and traditional ornaments. • Indian leaders did wear feather headdresses, but they weren't long and trailing like Sioux war bonnets. Headdresses were made of a ring of feathers that stood up from a headband

  36. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Clothing • Women usually wore basket hats woven from bear grass and cornhusks. • Women and men both wore their hair long, either leaving it loose or putting it into two braids • The Nez Perces also painted their faces for special occasions. They used different patterns for war paint, religious ceremonies, and festive decoration.

  37. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Chief Joseph, Nez Perce, 1877

  38. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Shelter • Originally, the Nez Perce lived in settled villages of earth houses. They made these homes by digging an underground room, then building a wooden frame over it and covering the frame with earth, cedar bark, and tule mats. • There were two styles of Nez Perce earth houses: oval-shaped longhouses, which could be as long as 150 feet, and smaller round houses. • Dozens of families lived together in a longhouse, while only one family lived in a round house.

  39. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Shelter • Once the Nez Perce began hunting the buffalo, they began to use tipis like the Plains tribes. Tipis, or teepees, are tall, cone-shaped buffalo-hide houses. • Since Nez Perce hunters moved frequently to follow the buffalo, a tipi was carefully designed to set up and break down quickly, like a modern tent.

  40. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Longhouse Tepees or Tipis

  41. Native American Culture Plateau Tribes: Nez Perce Shelter • Nez Perce people do not live in old-fashioned earth houses anymore • Native Americans sometimes use a tepee for a camping trip or to connect with their heritage, but not for permanent shelter. • Nez Perce people today live in modern houses and apartment buildings.

  42. SS4G2 Why did they occupy the areas they did? NEZ PERCE • The Nez Perce were fishing and hunting people so the Idaho, Washington, and Oregon area catered to these needs. • The areas occupied had a great deal of large animals (buffalo, deer, elk, and other game). • The women were able to gather food from the gardens they grew. • With horses, the men were able to travel over the mountains to trade with the Plains Indians.

  43. Native American Culture Southwest Tribes: Hopi

  44. Native American Culture Southwest Tribes: Hopi Background Information • Hopi means “peaceful people” • Lived in Arizona area • Used Kachinas and Kivas in religious ceremonies • Women were buried in their wedding outfit so when they entered the spirit world they would be dressed appropriately.

  45. Native American Culture Southwest Tribes: Hopi Food • They raised corn or maize as the basic food.  They grew 24 different kinds of corn, but the blue and white was the most common.  • They also grew beans, squash, melons, pumpkins, and fruit.

  46. Native American Culture Southwest Tribes: Hopi Clothing • Hopi men didn't wear much clothing-- only breech cloth • Hopi women wore knee-length cotton dresses called mantas. A manta fastened at a woman's right shoulder, leaving her left shoulder bare. • Missionaries didn't think this dress style was modest enough, so in the 1900's many Hopi women started wearing blouses underneath their mantas.

  47. Native American Culture Southwest Tribes: Hopi Clothing • Men and women both wore moccasins on their feet. • For dances and special occasions, women painted their moccasins white and wrapped white strips of deerskin around their shins as leggings.

  48. Native American Culture Southwest Tribes: Hopi Shelter • Hopi people lived in adobe houses, which are multi-story house complexes made of adobe (clay and straw baked into hard bricks) and stone. • Each adobe unit was home to one family, like a modern apartment. Hopi people used ladders to reach the upstairs apartments. • A Hopi adobe house can contain dozens of units and was often home to an entire extended clan.

  49. SS4G2 Why did they occupy the areas they did? HOPI • The Hopi Indians are now located on the Black Mesa in Arizona near a place called the Painted Desert. Most of the original area of the Hopi Indians was made into the Hopi Reservation.  The original area of the Hopi tribe was located almost all in northern Arizona.  • The Hopi have always viewed their land as sacred. Agriculture is a very important part of their culture. Villages were originally located below the mesa edges close to their springs. • The Hopi tribe lived inside a very warm climate.  There’s not much of any form of precipitation during the winter but the temperature is very cold in the mountains. The Hopis lived in the plains area.  Year around the humidity is very low. During the summer, on average they get around 30 inches of rain. 

  50. SS4G2 Why did they occupy the areas they did? Hopi • Oraibi and Walipi are inhabited traditional villages, which means they have no outside electricity, no running water, no sewer, no piped in natural gas. Walipi is actually a bit more primitive than Oraibi as Oraibi does allow solar panels & some generators. • Natural Resources Available: In some areas the land/soil is not very helpful for trying to grow produce. There are some areas that have very good soil and other areas that don’t have any at all. Some of Arizona's largest native animals consist of grizzly bears, timber wolf, elk, and bison. The water sources are also healthy, therefore can be used for drinking water.

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